What is an unusual paper paint?

abnormal pap paint is a pap pain, which, when looking under the microscope, showed the irregularity of the laboratory technician. Abnormal parliats are not unusual and many women experience at least one unusual result during their lives. There are a number of causes of abnormal pap paint, and although the result should be solved, it should not be considered the cause of immediate panic.

Although the PAP is used primarily as a screening test to pick up the early symptoms of cervical cancer, the abnormal result of the Pap does not mean that a woman has cancer. Many things can cause changes in cervical cells, from inflammation to sexually transmitted infection. It is important to monitor the abnormal pap paint to find out why the result was abnormal before the decision of the next step.

In addition to revealing a sample of cervix, pap paintings can also be abnormal due to yeast infoCoition, irritation, inflammation, human papilloma virus (HPV) or infection by other sexually transmitted infections. If the laboratory returns unusual results to its doctor, they usually recommend the subsequent test to discuss the results. After talking to you, the doctor may decide to take another pap coat, test sexually transmitted infections, or prescribe a drug to treat yeast infection or inflammation. If it is particularly worried, colposcopy may be recommended. In colposcopy, the physician examines the cervix, vagina and ashamed with a high -performance microscope to identify irregularity areas and take samples for biopsy.

Usually the laboratory does not only say that the paint was "abnormal", describes the type of observed abnormality. Many laboratories evaluate unusual results from one to five, with the least serious and five are a Concern problem. Abnormal Pap paint can also discover things such as atypical spinocellular or glandular cells or low and high degree of squamous intraepiteliali lesions. All these conditions describe specific types of cellular changes that can be observed.

Sometimes the laboratory returns the pap to paint as "unsatisfactory" or "inconclusive". This is not intended to cast aspersion on the patient. Rather, it shows that the sample taken during the PAP test was not good enough to be convincingly explored under the microscope, which means that another sample needs to be taken. Sometimes abnormal pap paint is also a false positive result, because the sample was contaminated under the microscope or looked slightly "off", but nothing is wrong.

If a woman has several abnormal panel results in a row, it may be a sign of developing cervical cancer, and more aggressive diagnosis and treatment may be required.

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